We shouldn't lose sight of the key fact, though: companies can make decisions about their datacenters that significantly impact the carbon-heaviness of the electricity they use.

Editor's Note: Earlier this week, we ran a piece based on Greenpeace's report and The Climate Desk's reporting about Apple's datacenter's reliance on the coal-heavy grid in North Carolina. Many readers pointed out that Apple was planning to install the country's largest commercial solar farm in the area and was planning to run biogas-powered fuel cells as well. Apple, itself, raised methodological issues with the Greenpeace study that centered around how the organization estimated how large the Apple datacenter actually is. That's really important because if the datacenter draws less energy, a much greater percentage of the power would come from renewable energy sources.

The bottom line is that we were a little too credulous about the Greenpeace methodology. At the same time, I don't think Greenpeace's estimate was crazy. An Amazon datacenter manager looked at the publicly available information and drew this conclusion: "Even using these fairly conservative numbers for a modern datacenter build, [Apple's project] would be 78MW total power, which is huge. The actual number is likely somewhat higher." So, Greenpeace's estimate of 100MW may have been high, but it certainly wasn't nuts. Apple says the datacenter will only draw a peak of 20MW. We've been trying to independently verify that number, but we haven't been able to.

So, after talking with both Apple and Greenpeace, I think the follow up below, originally published at Wired by Rob McMillan and shared through The Climate Desk, adequately addresses the controversy. We shouldn't lose sight of the key fact, though: companies can make decisions about their datacenters that significantly impact the carbon-heaviness of the electricity they use.

Call it the battle of Maiden. This week, Apple and Greenpeace traded very public barbs over how much clean power is used by Apple's $1 billion state-of-the-art data center in Maiden, North Carolina.

But it appears that much of the arguing stems from their inability to agree on what they're arguing about.

On Monday, Greenpeace released a report calling Apple's data center a power-hungry threat to the environment, but Apple responded by saying Greenpeace got its facts wrong. The key sticking point is a simple question: How much energy is Apple's data center burning? Greenpeace says 100 megawatts, while Apple says it's only 20 megawatts.

The truth may be somewhere in-between.

According to Greenpeace, Apple's data center relies too much on coal-produced electricity, and the company hasn't done as much as it could to secure other, more environmentally friendly sources of power. They've even produced a video to make the point:

Apple is clearly unhappy with the report. After all, it's adding some unprecedented green-energy generating features to the site, including a massive solar array on the site along with a 5-megawatt biogas generator. "We believe this industry-leading project will make Maiden the greenest data center ever built," said Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet, in an email message.

She added that 60 percent of the 20 megawatts used by the facility will come from the site's solar farm and biogas-powered fuel cells. About 5 megawatts of that will come from the fuel cells, and the other 7 from the solar array.

So why the disconnect? Greenpeace says it got the 100 megawatt number by doing a simple calculation: 1MW of power demand for every $15 million spent on the data center plus 50 percent extra for non-computer energy demands. Apple, they add, has said it plans to spend $1 billion at Maiden over the next decade.

But that $1 billion figure isn't exactly the right number to use when compared to Apple's 20 megawatt figure. When it announced the Maiden facility last year, Apple pegged its investment at $500 million. The company has reportedly told local officials that it expects to invest a total of $1 billion on the site over the next decade -- presumably to pay for the green energy initiatives and maybe even building a second data center when the need arises -- but that hasn't happened yet.

So Greenpeace is talking about an imaginary $1 billion facility, to be built sometime in the future. Apple appears to be talking about the $500 million facility that's up and running today.

That makes the difference less stark. Using Greenpeace's same metrics, that would put the current Maiden facility at 50 megawatts.

Even so, Greenpeace's Gary Cook questions Apple's power consumption figure. "It seems low even for the size of the existing shell they have there if you look at other facilities" he says. "I would expect as they continue to ramp up that facility, it will continue to go north."

What he'd like to see is a commitment from Apple to keep buying renewable energy, even as it expands the data center.

That's what Google has done, he says. "They've actually put data centers in locations where the grid's not very green, but hey have matched this with long term 20 year contracts for big chunks of wind," he says. "Companies like Apple and Microsoft could be doing this as well. There are wind developers who would like to bring their power to market. If they had forward-looking companies signing long-term contracts, that would help bring more power on the grid."

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